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What we’ve lost (3): Friendship

The last 10 or 15 years have not been kind to Canada. Along with a decline in prosperity has come an erosion of the things that made our society great, a decline of what held us together and made us the envy of the world: things like resilience, friendship and service. In this series, National Post writers consider What We’ve Lost. Read More
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Colby Cosh: The judge who excused a sex offender for failing to register

I was a little torn reading in the Hamilton Spectator about the latest blow to “Christopher’s Law,” the Ontario statute from 2000 that created a provincial sex-offender registry. The law was named for Christopher Stevenson, an 11-year-old boy who was abducted and murdered by a man just released from prison for an earlier sex crime against an 11-year-old. Laws named after individual crime victims are usually lousy ones, but Justice Davin Garg’s ruling has a slightly fantastical quality. Compelled by a recent Supreme Court ruling against lifetime mandatory registration for sex offenders in a parallel federal database, Garg found he had no choice but to strike down the analogous mandatory-registration requirement in the Ontario law. Read More
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Chris Selley: Alberta spends bad money foolishly chasing good hockey

Good news from the hockey world: Plans for the 2028 World Cup are proceeding apace. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman was in Calgary on Tuesday, where Mayor Jeromy Farkas made his pitch for the city to play host in its brand-new arena, Scotia Place, which is set to open at the beginning of the 2027–28 NHL season. But it doesn’t really matter where they hold the tournament; the vast majority of us will watch on television. And it should be terrific. Read More
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Six Canadian made hand creams to salve your winter skincare problems

If enduring harsh conditions while fishing the ruthless waters of the Atlantic doesn’t dry out your hands, nothing will. Annapolis Valley’s Les Falconer and his uncle Perley Beairsto founded Nova Scotia Fisherman with these Maritimers in mind. One of their go-to products is Deck Hand Cream, a concoction of Nova Scotia sea kelp, cacao, aloe, shea, castor oil, bayberry and sunflower to relieve calluses, cracks and sores. Lightly scented with lime, grapefruit, bergamot, lemon grass, patchouli, cedarwood and juniper, it’s “so rich you just need a smidgen” according to their website. Read More
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